Fiji's military chief returned to power as this troubled country's prime minister Saturday, a day after the president suspended the constitution and fired the judges who had declared the military's leader's government illegal.

There is little question that Barack Obama captured Europe's heart during the tumultuous visit that ended Saturday evening, but hard questions remain about whether Obama, if he wins, could transform that enthusiasm into concrete policy gains.

The warm welcome that washed over Barack Obama during his Berlin appearance Thursday made it abundantly clear that Europeans have a strong desire to heal the trans-Atlantic rift and the Democratic president candidate is a good choice for the job.

How many people who buy the Robb Report's special "Best of the Best" issue (June 2007) can afford the luxury goods it celebrates, and how many others pay $9.99 for 407 glossy pages of vicarious thrills?

In a case testing Italian-U.S. relations, a Milan prosecutor sought arrest warrants Wednesday for six more purported CIA operatives, accusing them of helping plan the kidnapping of an Egyptian radical Muslim cleric.

An Italian judge on Friday ordered the arrests of 13 CIA officers for secretly transporting a Muslim preacher from Italy to Egypt as part of U.S. anti-terrorism efforts a rare public objection to the practice by a close American ally.

After four years of getting cold-shouldered by the Arab world, Israel is now basking in some regional warming. Over the weekend, Jordanian Foreign Minister Hani al-Mulki visited Israel and the Palestinian Authority areas. It was Jordan's highest-level visit in four years.

Major U.S. allies on Thursday rejected a claim by U.N. Secretary-General Kofi Annan that the war in Iraq was "illegal" because Washington and its coalition partners never got Security Council backing for the invasion.